Giant bugs crawl over the Johnson Museum -- and other summer events
By Justine Dougherty
On Friday, July 10, Cornell's Herbert F. Johnson Museum of Art will have
giant dung beetles, praying mantises, bees and slugs crawling all over it. At 9:30 p.m.
(rain date at the same time Saturday, July 11) the popular movie
Microcosmos, with its close-up view of the world of very small
creatures, will be projected on the side of the
building for viewing from the lawn.
The film showing is co-sponsored with Noyes Community Center and Cornell
Summer College, and is one of more than a dozen other free events at the museum this summer.
Cathy Klimaszewski, the Ames Assistant Director for Educational Programs
at the Johnson Museum, said, "This is a great time to visit the museum. We
have many programs in place to engage adult visitors, children on vacation from
school and families. Your trip to the museum can be lively, with our hands-on workshops
and gallery talks, or contemplative, as you stroll through our galleries enjoying art from
all over the world."
Some of the museum's current exhibitions include Roy Lichtenstein's last
series of works, "Brushstroke Still Lifes,"
Evelyn Metzger's paintings of Yemen, and holdings of glass produced by the studio
of Louis Comfort Tiffany. The "Recent Acquisitions" show offers a first-time look at
75 new paintings, sculpture, prints, photographs and drawings brought into the
museum's collection over the past three years.
More than 65,000 people visited the museum last year, taking in, along with
the works of such artists as Edward Hopper, Albert Bierstadt and Eva Hoffman, the
360-degree view of Ithaca and Cayuga Lake from the museum's fifth floor.
Museum hours are 10 a.m. to 5 p.m., Tuesday
through Sunday, and admission is always free.
Here's a list of some summer offerings:
- Sunday, June 28, at 2 p.m.: By the Sea: Join senior docent Maryterese
Pasquale-Bowen to look at images of the sea
depicted in the permanent collection.
- Thursday, July 9, at noon: Tour: Art for Lunch: Join museum educator Diane
Butler for a gallery tour of "A Golden Age:
American Painting and Sculpture from the Collection of Richard J. and Sheila W.
Schwartz," an exhibition that includes works by
Albert Beierstadt, Asher B. Durand, William Merritt Chase and more.
- Friday, July 10, at 9:30 p.m.: Movie:
"Microcosmos After Dark" (1996)
projected on the side of the museum building.
- Sunday, July 12, at 1 p.m.: Docent Informational Gathering: Ever consider
volunteering at the museum? Come to this informal session and learn from staff
and current docents about the joys and rewards of being a museum docent.
- Sunday, July 12, at 2 p.m.: Tour : Lives of European Artists: Senior docent
Luke Colavito highlights several paintings from the European collection in the context of
the artists' life histories.
- Saturday, July 18, from 1 to 4 p.m.: "Articipation-A Day with Clay":
Come and experience a variety of activities using clay, Play-Doh and more. Feel a pot
turning on a wheel, experiment with new techniques for hand-building and
decoration, and work with computer imaging to
transform what you have made. This event is for all ages and is co-sponsored with the
Cornell Ceramics Studio.
- Thursday, July 23, at noon: Art for Lunch: A tour of the special exhibition
"A Bountiful Harvest," with Mellon Print
Room assistant Andrew Weislogel.
- Sunday, July 26, at 2 p.m.: "First
Person Singular: I.M. Pei." A 90-minute PBS video features Johnson Museum
architect I.M. Pei leading viewers through some of the buildings he has designed, including
the entrance to the Louvre, the National Gallery of Art's East Wing and the
Rock and Roll Hall of Fame.
- Sunday, July 26, at 3:30 p.m.: Architectural tour of the museum with
museum educator Kate Bevington, with an eye to the details that make this building one of
Pei's masterpieces.
- Thursday, Aug. 6, at noon: Art for Lunch: Tour recent acquisitions
with Nancy Green, chief curator. This is a chance to see some of the spectacular prints,
drawings and photographs recently acquired by the museum.
- Sunday, Aug. 9, at 2 p.m.: Sculptural Walking Tour, with senior docent
Eva Hoffmann. Take an hour break to tour the outdoor sculptures at the museum and
nearby on campus.
Call 255-6464 for more information.
June 25, 1998
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